Grant Details
Grant Number: |
3R01CA086257-07S1 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Biener, Lois |
Organization: |
University Of Massachusetts Boston |
Project Title: |
Smoking Trajectories Amid Waning State Program Budgets |
Fiscal Year: |
2007 |
Abstract
This application proposes continued longitudinal research on the impact of three major types of public health
interventions used by many states to reduce the use of tobacco and the health risks of second-hand smoke:
local clean indoor air policies, local policies to restrict youth access to tobacco products and televised anti-
tobacco media campaigns. The data come from two sources: 1) three waves of telephone interviews with a
population based sample of Massachusetts adults and youth who were first interviewed in 2001/2002; and
2) a linked set of town-level data on the tobacco control regulations, activities, funding, and demographic
characteristics of the 351 cities and towns in Massachusetts in which the respondents resided at baseline.
The interim period between the first and last survey includes one in which important changes have occurred
in Massachusetts: State funding for the tobacco control program has been cut by 90% necessitating cessation
of the mass media campaign and drastically reduced funding for other local programs. At the same time, the
adoption of local smokefree workplace ordinances has proliferated, increasing what some see as the most
effective intervention for reducing smoking at the population level. In addition to continued examination of
the relative impact of policy and media interventions, this project will take advantage of the multiple
longitudinal measurement of a population-based sample to study the smoking trajectories of youth, young
adults, and older adults. The project has three specific aims: 1) To investigate youth cigarette smoking
trajectories and elucidate the individual, family and community level predictors of transitions from abstinence
to experimental or occasional use to regular, established use; 2) To investigate smoking trajectories of adult
smokers and recent quitters and elucidate the individual, family and community level predictors of extended
cessation, versus relapse, versus sustained or increased smoking.3) To provide descriptive information about
the relationship between reductions in funding for the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Program and changes
in youth and adult reports of a) exposure to anti-tobacco media messages; b) teenagers' ease of access to
tobacco products; c) perceptions of the tobacco industry.
Publications
None. See parent grant details.